Please select your home edition
Edition
Crewsaver 2021 Safetyline LEADERBOARD

Skandia Cowes Week Ladies Day Trophy

by Peta Stuart-Hunt 4 Aug 2006 21:08 BST 3 August 2006

At a packed ceremony last night at Skandia Cowes Week that was attended by top flight sportsmen and women, organisers, sponsors and media, the inaugural Ladies Day Trophy was presented on behalf of the regatta organisers, Cowes Combined Clubs, by Dame Ellen MacArthur to Mrs Betty Moore in recognition of her outstanding contribution and commitment to sailing at this world-famous yachting event. Betty, from Horsham, West Sussex, has raced her Solent Sunbeam, WHY, in every Cowes Week since 1947, but sadly this year she is confined to shore due to a recent operation, however, the 88-year old is determined to be back next year for her 60th year.

Cowes Combined Clubs has introduced a Ladies Day for the first time in the history of the 180-year old Event to celebrate women in sailing and to recognise female sporting prowess as well as to have some fun! The sport of sailing is actually one of the few where men and woman compete equally and is also one where women have competed from the beginning of its history. Of the 8500 competitors now racing at Skandia Cowes Week this year, one third are female.

Also shortlisted for the Trophy were:

Jeanette Critchell - nominated by her daughter who said, “ I know the only reason my mum took up sailing was to conquer her fear of the water, but she realised that she still had a fear of the water, but loved the sailing.” Jeanette has competed successfully in Cowes for a number of years, and although diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis in 1998, she refuses to let that stop her from sailing.

Kerry Gruson - a disabled sailor from Miami, Florida, who is competing in her first Skandia Cowes Week, thanks to an adaptive seating and steering system. Kerry’s condition is caused by a lack of oxygen to the brain, that has left her with paralysis in the legs and arms.

Dee Caffari – Dee is Britain’s latest sailing “rock star”, having become the first woman to sail single-handed, non-stop around the world against the prevailing winds and currents, establishing a benchmark of 178 days, 3 hours, 5 minutes and 36 seconds. She sailed the 72 foot steel yacht Aviva, arriving back in Southampton in May this year.

Gavia Wilkinson-Cox - was a leading force in the worldwide administration of sailing when she worked for what was then the International Yacht Racing Union - now the International Sailing Federation. She is an accomplished Dragon sailor, who has competed in Cowes Week every year since 1973.

Related Articles

Entries open for Cowes Week
199th edition of the world's biggest annual keelboat regatta Cowes Week Ltd is delighted to announce that entries for the 2025 Regatta are now open. Posted on 17 Jan
Autism On The Water joins Cowes Week
As one of the Official Charities Cowes Week Limited is delighted to welcome Autism on the Water as one of the Official Charities for the 2025 edition of the Regatta. They will be joining the RNLI who became an official charity partner in 2024. Posted on 14 Jan
"Glamma", gorgeous Cowes Week
Hundreds of boats and thousands of sailors flooded the quaint seaside town For the first week of August, the Cowes Combined Clubs hosted their annual highlight of the summer sailing season on the Solent, the infamous Cowes Race Week off Cowes, Isle of Wight. Posted on 5 Aug 2024
The oldest footage of Cowes Week
A look back into the depths of our video archive Cowes Week 2024 has just concluded. But how has it changed since the early years? England has certainly changed, and so have the yachts. Let's look back at the 1920s to 70s at the oldest video footage we can find in the archive. Posted on 4 Aug 2024
Cowes Week Day 7: A classic finale
Downwind finish against the tide on the Royal Yacht Squadron line A spectacular final day of racing at Cowes concluded with a classic downwind finish against the tide on the Royal Yacht Squadron line, with competitors sailing tight into the beach off the Green in a thick and fast procession that lasted for hours. Posted on 3 Aug 2024
Cowes Week Day 6
Close racing and clear winners Competition is always close across many Cowes Week classes, but few can rival IRC Class 3, where Adam Gosling's JPK 10.80 Yes! and David Franks' J/112e Leon have been match racing each other all week and are only two points apart at the top. Posted on 1 Aug 2024
Cowes Week Day 5
Gladiator wins Britannia Cup In a stunning performance Tony Langley's TP52 Gladiator beat 34 of the highest rated IRC yachts competing at Cowes Week to lift the prestigious Britannia Cup, after a long postponement while competitors waited for a stable wind to materialise. Posted on 31 Jul 2024
HMS Queen Elizabeth's salute exchange
With the Royal Yacht Squadron at Cowes Week The Royal Navy flagship HMS Queen Elizabeth sailed up the Solent to give the Royal Yacht Squadron a six gun salute during Cowes Week on her way into her home base of Portsmouth following four months of repairs in Scotland. Posted on 31 Jul 2024
Cowes Week Day 4
The short series has now concluded, with nine of the 12 scheduled races completed Today dawned bright and sunny with a northerly breeze that faded during the morning as the land heated up, but a stable sea breeze failed to materialise, forcing racing for all classes to be abandoned. Posted on 30 Jul 2024
Cowes Week Day 3
Sun, spectacle and tight finishes Racing today kicked off in a dramatic fashion, with the fastest yachts at the regatta, competing in IRC Class 0, starting close inshore and manoeuvring only a few boat lengths from the beach, before heading east from the Royal Yacht Squadron line. Posted on 29 Jul 2024